Any luck yet?

This morning - September 18th. Left home at 7:00 am in the heavy fog. Hit my favorite skid trail at about 8:00 and walked 400 yards and saw a big cow with this young guy following her.
My BSA chambered for 338-06. 175 yards hard quartering away. 210 TSSX @ 2750 fps traveled the length of the moose and lodged under the off shoulder.
Moose went 30 yards and dropped. I was able to get the pickup to within one winch cable length plus 10 feet of rope.;) LoL

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Good going! Happy to see your report and photos!
 
2nd day of season. Shared between 7 families. It was a Limited Entry Hunt moose LEH. My LEH, my tag.
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Ain't life grand!
 

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Took a cow elk with the bow from the ground yesterday.
Chirped her in to 20 yards, she turned broadside, easy shot.

Light wind was perfect, I was in-between two pine trees with a 2 foot slot between them, she wasn't aware of me at all.
Ran 50 yards into a little meadow then just stood there until she tipped over.
Pinned at 7:15pm, took me until 1:30am to calf sled to boned out bits in two trips wiggling through the trees to the truck a 1/4 mile away.

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I snuck up on a doe and watched her from about 50 yards for 20 mins or so. I broke a twig when I adjusted my leg and was surprised how long it took her to find me with my camo on. They open up on the 10th this month.


Nice elk, Norton.
 
took my first buck of the season on monday late in the morning.
MD was already at camp when we arrived and had even hiked in and partially assembled the treestand ladder and rigging but the last guy of our small circle that used it..... didn't seem to have left any of the rigging gear LOL Good thing I brought new stuff.
My brother joined me for his first hunt in over a decade. Was a whole lot of fun.
Took my deer at 15 yards with a shot from the stand that went in at the base of the throat, obliterated the heart and lungs and exited at the diaphram. Darn thing came straight to the stand and there was no other shot if I wanted him down on the uphill side of things. So, my dad's 1911 BSA .303 sporter with a 180 powershok..... done quick and clean.
For this banged up and broken guy..... was a great hunt, nice deer and I am so grateful for friends and family that make it possible for me to keep hunting. Might have some pics somewhere but the phone battery is dead, charger cord is somewhere in my gear and my camera is also still packed in the truck.
My brother and I broke camp yesterday afternoon and headed for home due to the crazy hot weather and the fear my meat might spoil.
MD stayed at camp and had planned to hunt till friday. In this heat if he gets one we will hear from him sooner i bet.

not a monster but he's gonna be a fine eating blacktail. Loads of fat on him too.
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took my first buck of the season on monday late in the morning.
MD was already at camp when we arrived and had even hiked in and partially assembled the treestand ladder and rigging but the last guy of our small circle that used it..... didn't seem to have left any of the rigging gear LOL Good thing I brought new stuff.
My brother joined me for his first hunt in over a decade. Was a whole lot of fun.
Took my deer at 15 yards with a shot from the stand that went in at the base of the throat, obliterated the heart and lungs and exited at the diaphram. Darn thing came straight to the stand and there was no other shot if I wanted him down on the uphill side of things. So, my dad's 1911 BSA .303 sporter with a 180 powershok..... done quick and clean.
For this banged up and broken guy..... was a great hunt, nice deer and I am so grateful for friends and family that make it possible for me to keep hunting. Might have some pics somewhere but the phone battery is dead, charger cord is somewhere in my gear and my camera is also still packed in the truck.
My brother and I broke camp yesterday afternoon and headed for home due to the crazy hot weather and the fear my meat might spoil.
MD stayed at camp and had planned to hunt till friday. In this heat if he gets one we will hear from him sooner i bet.

not a monster but he's gonna be a fine eating blacktail. Loads of fat on him too.
nqghzCr.jpg

It was great to be in camp with you and bro.

Yeah, I had horseshoes this week too. Details after I download from the camera and find time to post in the next few days. Gotta start butchering tomorrow. Meat is in my upright freezer right now that I turn on and off periodically to use as a cooler.

Funny about the heat. You know how we were talking about the heat might be hampering movement. I thought maybe they'd gone nocturnal.

Anyway, yesterday and possibly today too, record setting temperatures were reached and there was action.
 
After sitting in 45ACPKING's stand for two hours Tuesday Evening, five hours Wednesday morning and two hours in the afternoon and sighting only two chipmunks, which might have been the same one twice, I was starting to wonder if the unseasonal high temperatures were keeping deer from moving.

Thursday morning I got to the stand just before daybreak and around 7:05 I heard "crunch-crunch-crunch" on the dry ground, twigs and cones and saw a deer coming along. In my flurry of activity putting earplugs in and mounting the rifle, the deer stopped behind a tangle of brush 25 yards away, looking up at me. Busted!

I had a hard time finding it in the scope at first, looked with the naked eye again, then the scope and finally got a good view, but only of the head and a bit of neck. I saw it had antlers. Looked like long tall spikes to me. I aimed a little lower where the neck should be and shot. The deer dropped but then kicked around and shoved himself downhill into my sight, trying to get up. I put another one in the neck and he was down. The first shot had hit the spine. Either I flinched or the 140 grain 280 Remington bullet deflected.

Turned out to be a three-point. I had not seen the ends of the antlers as I described earlier. They had blended in with the branches of the bush the deer had been hiding behind.

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The wife and I left the house this morning at 6:15 in the dark to drive out to a small watering hole we found a few days ago while out scouting for mulies. It is so dry here the leaves on the trees are crunchy before they even fall off the trees. Before I continue though.... I have had FIVE mule deer bucks that took up residence in my back woodlot back in June, appearing like clockwork every 8 to 10 days, hanging around for a couple and then leaving again. Two days ago they appeared again, this time with no velvet and looking fat and healthy. 2 - 4x4 , a 2x2 a 2x1 and a spiker. Driving me nuts all day and then sleeping in the yard last night. Had to take the dog out front on a leash as the back yard was off limits obviously. Funny thing is I am out there BBQ'ing and they are laying on my lawn not 50 feet away.....
So.... this morning I was amped up to get out to that watering hole about a 1/2 hour drive away. As we got close I was watching the side hills for any sign of deer as it was just shooting light. We got to the skidder trail that led to the watering hole, still 400 yards away and not in view due to the rolling terrain. As I was about to turn and park the truck I caught something in my view that was out of place. I parked and grabbed my binos and sure enough , it was a deer and I saw antlers easily. I decided to drive towards it for another 100 yards and as I did that the deer bolted...... with 7 more behind it..... the flagging tails told me they were not mulies..... good thing I buy a whitetail tag every season just in case.
I parked the truck and went up onto a high spot off the road and got them in view as I chambered a 160gr nosler partition into my 7mm rem mag Ruger MK II and put the glass on the running deer. There were 7 of them and the buck was #3 in the line of flagging tails..... then the last deer did a fatal stop and turn to have a look back at me and showed me his rack..... the rifle barked instinctively and the deer dropped at 275 yards on the range finder. Point of aim was neck above the shoulder and the nosler found it's mark. Killing the deer where he stood.
It was an easy drag down hill to the truck where the wife had already backed it up to the bank and got the tarp ready.
We rolled in the drive way at a quarter to 9.
I've taken many mulies and blacktails but this is my first whitetail in all my years of hunting. It has 4 points on one side and 2 on the other but I'm liking more that it was nice and heavy and loaded with gobs of fat around all it's organs.
Feeling blessed this morning that's for sure ;)
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The wife and I left the house this morning at 6:15 in the dark to drive out to a small watering hole we found a few days ago while out scouting for mulies. It is so dry here the leaves on the trees are crunchy before they even fall off the trees. Before I continue though.... I have had FIVE mule deer bucks that took up residence in my back woodlot back in June, appearing like clockwork every 8 to 10 days, hanging around for a couple and then leaving again. Two days ago they appeared again, this time with no velvet and looking fat and healthy. 2 - 4x4 , a 2x2 a 2x1 and a spiker. Driving me nuts all day and then sleeping in the yard last night. Had to take the dog out front on a leash as the back yard was off limits obviously. Funny thing is I am out there BBQ'ing and they are laying on my lawn not 50 feet away.....
So.... this morning I was amped up to get out to that watering hole about a 1/2 hour drive away. As we got close I was watching the side hills for any sign of deer as it was just shooting light. We got to the skidder trail that led to the watering hole, still 400 yards away and not in view due to the rolling terrain. As I was about to turn and park the truck I caught something in my view that was out of place. I parked and grabbed my binos and sure enough , it was a deer and I saw antlers easily. I decided to drive towards it for another 100 yards and as I did that the deer bolted...... with 7 more behind it..... the flagging tails told me they were not mulies..... good thing I buy a whitetail tag every season just in case.
I parked the truck and went up onto a high spot off the road and got them in view as I chambered a 160gr nosler partition into my 7mm rem mag Ruger MK II and put the glass on the running deer. There were 7 of them and the buck was #3 in the line of flagging tails..... then the last deer did a fatal stop and turn to have a look back at me and showed me his rack..... the rifle barked instinctively and the deer dropped at 275 yards on the range finder. Point of aim was neck above the shoulder and the nosler found it's mark. Killing the deer where he stood.
It was an easy drag down hill to the truck where the wife had already backed it up to the bank and got the tarp ready.
We rolled in the drive way at a quarter to 9.
I've taken many mulies and blacktails but this is my first whitetail in all my years of hunting. It has 4 points on one side and 2 on the other but I'm liking more that it was nice and heavy and loaded with gobs of fat around all it's organs.
Feeling blessed this morning that's for sure ;)
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Great!
 
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